| John Doe Subpoenas: Toward a Consistent Legal Standard |
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| Written by Nathaniel Gleicher [View as PDF] | |
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118 Yale L.J. 320 (2008).
This Note considers the rising trend of anonymous
online harassment and the use of John Doe subpoenas to unmask anonymous
speakers. Although anonymity often serves as an important shield for valuable
speech, it also protects online harassment that can chill or completely silence
the speech of its targets. This Note argues that the public figure doctrine
should be adapted to John Doe subpoenas to distinguish between online
harassment and more valued anonymous speech. It then divides John Doe subpoena
standards into six constituent factors, evaluates each one, and proposes a
final standard that consistently balances the needs of plaintiffs and
defendants and helps judges to distinguish online harassment from other forms
of anonymous speech. |